Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, March 2, 1921, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

. TME BEMIDJI D N AILY PIONEER ™ | b i Bfism KEATON IN “ONE WEEK?” | mirrors and balldons play a part in the fun. SHOWING AT THE REX TODAY| Lloyd comedies are a feature in Buster Keaton, it will be remem-; themselyes and cost as much as a five ‘bered, was for several years one of or six reel drama--yet the program the famous Three Keatons, in the at the Grand tonight includes a flve- vaudeville act which appeared all part comedy drama entitled over the country under that name.| 000" featuring J. Warren Kerrigan. He was the little chap with the ‘longl : and serious face' whom his daddy SCOTCH SINGERS AND DANCERS; used to throw about the stage much! 3 as one would toss a bean- bag or a W4 sack of potatoes. ‘The Scotch Macks ha Persons seeing the performance of | tablislied for! Many ye:¥ry:ae ayi the Three Keatons marveled that the best‘Scotch-entertafners; i Buster didn’t have very bone in his:travelled nearl v precious young body broken in the;'rhey were the first gct of pursuit of his theatrical career. He ever > appear st the ‘ol landed on every part of his anatomy, 'gere” Paris, also the “Wintergarden' Put always came up smiling, so that | of Berlin. Johngy Mack, himself for 1t ‘looked as it he were made of rub- |years a member of the famous ‘‘Lan- ber..inatead of flesh and bones. cashire Dancers? in;London, same . Buster grew up and entered mo- tion pictures. His work with Ros-!iste as Laddie ;Cliff coe “Fatty” Arbuckle astonished and | Chaplin. Pleased motion picture fans through-| The two Scotch Macks will appear out the world, and big things were at the regular Friday vaudeville predicted for him. When “Fatty” |show at the Grany. Arbuckle decided to abandon short comedy subjects for longer special CHARMING BILLIE BURKE comedy features, he nominated Bus-| ter Keaton as most worthy succes- IN PARAMOUNT PICTURE ‘To see Billie Burke in a new photo- son. Buster has the rotund come- edian’s best wishes and Arbuckle is|play is deciledly a film event of im- an ardent tooter for the younger and | portante, but when one sees that | dainty star in so charming a comedy slenderer funmaker. - |as “The Education of Elizabeth” —emammm____ | Droved to be at the Elko theater last “PARLOR. BEDROOM AND Bn-ll”!nlght. then one enjoys a rare treat B yindeed. The last opportunity to see “sAme'E‘?Tmm Tonfilylthu cparming new Burke picture, f,:“:fi il ‘3e:nen:]nrn£§mn°m;‘; exe;mhme Efko theater, will be tonight aga i - when it has final . periences _o; Charles West, now ap-;, Ag ;\l chorus n;mr::;m the q 3 3 A | n s . ) he ‘was a deputy operating ”0"’""»f;;i‘;gel;urkep?snunu:xa?lfio artistic, " &f;:grmm shows today at the llex; There are numerous laughable 3 sayil f the choru: L de- -One summer night Wiest volunteer- 'spxyt: i‘erounco:thn!;ss.' ofllefllo'vll:: hu:r eflh;‘? ;gdflmfl' thl(ztce?imael alfi“ lfll‘aqi'f;;\\lhen her education is in progress 3‘ i twmm"lst :“hc 7 s |there are scenes of exceptional in- bos fl‘ Oh“n asslstant he p Mde b ;»teresz and'appeal and one leaves the y in-the hearse and started back' tpeater with the feeling that he has to the morgue. On the return, West i;nzde the acquaintance of a decidedly - ‘vll"‘?d”‘"c"“"ll‘: lodbefi it G‘t"’i‘"{'é““gl:worlh while creature. ‘That this is ':lnfl ”‘"K an ‘“35 l;e rth:b Al one o the best pictures starring ;B“ Kwu}; L‘:rxfi :;eh;?a;lsmm fl:; | mlu’: aur}xle. ieen in many moons, is o N em . loaped from the wagon. By the tme | Other attraction at the Elko are a :gs I::::;:n;;;:drggtlaid “l:t;lexlef h‘:":g | comedy and Paramount magazine. the two men, with trembling hands, AMIN turned the basket upside down. The T G A FLIRT Her fiance had just about decided But some as¥istant sat on the basket and West, led the horse by the reins. {of his men friends, with whom that and Charley too frightened to stay in the wagon, |that it couldn’t be done. jgave Teddy so many hectic adven- ® tures crowded into one day that she never craved excitement again. This “WOMAN IN HIS HOUSE" is the plot in “Ducks and Drakes", | REX THEA [UNDAY | Realart picture featuring Bebe Dan- Ar TER § AYiiels. at the Elko theater tomorrow One of the greatest motfon pictures,|,nd Friday. of the year will be the screen attrac- | rtday. tion at the Rex theater Sunday. It{post vivid feminine personality of +had a cataleptic fit. | | | stances can be cited to show that the COMING TO GRAND,Friddy 352 " Il over thé world. | act that ‘produced, such famous.art-| slangy | A comedy-melodrama showing the | BARBERRY HEDGE ) | " SPOILED TEN CROPS Hundreds and hundreds of in- common barberry is the most impor- itant factor in the spread of rust in northwest states. In a government bulletin on rust and barberry, Dr. E. . Stakmar® of University farm re- wi ho :a barberry hedge of 635 Suphse onhis . “Then one spring destroyed | the | hedge before. the ecome rysted. Ten'day: arves! the field wa | and ino. § prices, in club with the TWO MILL] tain that it gets better and orial Review fiction. the world of affairs. clothes, is aud 35 cents, s, No wonder Pictorial they see it, the woman solving her own meedlework. is “The Woman in His House,” in ¢ e today whioh Mildred Harrle heads an alle| oap rren So0ay In b best role, star cast. The production, which was | ronco Edward Martindel, Wade Bote- 1921 in - Review. ates ' the experience of a farmer al! “$30,- [ Crystal Bay, Lake Minnetonka, Minn., | i c0eq or lemon ofl to one quart of gshad tried to grow oats! \l?.!~ or. 10 years, but each; ‘biagK stém rust destroyed al- the gr "THE DAILY PIONEER t ‘The Seven Magazines . |* Pictorial Review F'America's Greatest Magazine for Women PICNRIALREVIEW';':;M A My —— published. It hag gained this uglluthm because ION women wi PICTORIA| jves you the best short PICTORIAL REVIEW £155% 2% 16, o6 e fin:y critics have bestowed signal{ bonors on t . PICTORIAL REVIEW gives ou men an have made resl worth-while achlevements in - PICTORIAL REVIEW to millions of —— who make their own a neceseity because it illustrates the worldsfamous Pictorial Review styles. Leading stores everywhere sell Pictorial Review Patterns. It was later discovered that the Raughty little vamp had been flirt | g PICTORIAL RENIEW Patterns—the best oftall laborer was not dead but had merely | ing, joined him in a conspiracy that | patterns—sell for 25, 30, Other_patterns sell for 40 and 50 ceat: are doubling up. Women knswa through its departments, PICTORIAL REVIEW REVIEW (700El ol “adviser to lems: an inspiration to the woman of the business world; a delight to the woman who enjoys fancy Great Novels . |ity ‘proved’‘to be 'excellent:'' Tt!'was years that a crop| ., { the first time.in: had been grown successfully on that farm. Every Minnesota land owner | should begin early in the spring to de- Istroy the barberry for the protection of grain crops, Furniture Cleaner. Home-made furnituré cleaner can be made by adding one tablespoonful of turpentine and three tablespoonfuls of ‘ When cool enough to to the hapg, use as a 1L furniture except “Boft' ' cheesecloth . for {boiling watel willglve the. good’ poli “T'here Deing no varnish Prices Slashed! The Y SPECIAL arrangement with a num- ber of the leading magazines, we are able to offer for 30 days only an exceptional i 1 opportunity to our readers to procure annua subscripticns for about onc-half the regular Your !Offer No. 1. ' PIONEER .. Good - Housekeepin, the reputation’ of | Pictorial Raeview.. agasine | . ry plece for u'Soft have.a dry miash hoppey b This js- Opportunity o Save Money WDNESDAY EVENING, MARCR 2, 192 ‘FLOCKS MUST HAVE ]yiflk and white ig made of qual parts nan’ ha¥ found only ¥ gew mask Chay A GOOD EGG MASH:| PY: weight.of finkly. sroundcoznmeal, | hoppers.in, pauliry Hiuses’. One farmer bran, shorts, finely know of any ound oats, and[told him he did not ment scraps. | B eeding cottage | neighbors who we?/ feeding ,their cheese or butturmilk, thy quantity ‘of |flocks dry mash. Iy tead, they were meat scraps nmay be r¢'duced or fed |feeding their hens /yhole grains only, separately in 2 ‘hoppey.” - yet expecting th to return a maxi- In journeying abowt. the state, Mr.imuni output of frgs, , - +Uihy g e seemmee— protein in the most available form.to ,make the white or:albumen of the egg. ‘ WOlet r arts ’ “Every poultry house,’ says N. E. . ‘a’'Cox plete StOCk |Chapman of the n;riculq?fil_ extension division at Univarsity Far i 1t is stid that only a small per cent of the 180,000 farmers in Minnesota supply dry mash in’any form to their fowls. Without a good egg ‘mash a hen cannot lay the maximum of eggs. She requires daily a large amount of Best agazmes at bargamn r'rice : ; T HE sacrificc.i_ ';rices that thesc magazine 4 are making is their contribution + "X as public spirit }d businesy men to the: fation wide drive on prices. The ‘magazines offered c:Sver in edivorial appeal ‘Mc entire range of magazine appeal— Y E chort stories, fast fons, arficy:s, gravura ‘pictures, departinents for-the home, / serial novels, and the news of the wolid. Two or more of the magzzines united in this great selling campaizn will supply the magazine' reading of your-home {or 1921. :Send. yyour‘order loday. Tomorrsw, you may {6rget. Use the venient blank ar; the bottom' of this’annrouncement. e o —’ 1 Year.... $5. 1 Year. u.oo% $3.00 Al for . You Save.$3.85 0 read it main- better every year. Offer No. 2 PIONEER .. 3. Cosmopolitan Pictorial Review. jal articles ‘women who Al for } $7.65 You Save $4.35 1 Year.... $5.00 $4.00 - $3.00 women Offer No. 3 PIONEER Hearst's fomsics | Pictorial \R.“ ot Review thing when Offer No. 4 PIONEER housekeeping prob- = . Hearst's -ill 5 Motor Boating. All for - $7.65 You Save $4.35 1 Year.... ss.oo} 00 All for $7.65 Year.... $5.00 $4.4 You Save $4.35 Pictorial Seven! ‘All for six months in the making, is declar- ed by many who have seen it to l)e! a motion picture masterplece, rank-! ing with such popular photoplays as “The Miracle Man,” “Daddy Long Legs” and others. In the cast with Miss Harris are Ramsey Wallace, ‘Thomas Holding, George Fisher, Ga- reth - Hughes, Winter Hall and lit- tle Irene Reels. The age-old theme emphasizing the divine power of mo- ther love is effectively employed in this powerful and moving screen drama. It is the story of a neglected ‘wife, a too busy and ambitious hus- band, a philosopher friend, and a baby. The work of Richard Hedrick in portraying the role of 1 youngster who is stricken with infantile paraly- sia is one of the outstanding points of this compelling photoplay. How mother love triumphs where sclence fails and straightens out the crookea limbs of the child is revealed in a fascimting story. In this production Mildred Harris has achieved her greatest success. The photography is wonderful; it was done by Pliny Goodfriend, In short, “The Woman in His House” i{s one of the most re- markable pictures that it has been the good fortune of the Rex theater ! 0 Ofter to its patrons for thelr enter-: tainment. Nobody should miss this. It’s chock full of love, laughter and tears. f i | : ) | — | FORGETS IN DARE:DEVILTRY | Harold Lloyd, in the role of a dis- appointed fover who seeks to forget Ly deeds of dare-deviltry, will amuse at the Grand theater today and to- morrow in “Number Please?”’ The title of this lial E. Roach com-| edy was inspired by the hero's series | of adventurers with some busy tele- Dhone booths. A large portion of the action takes place at a pleasure re- sort, where roller coasters, Ferris wheels, merry-go-rounds, laugking ler and Mzme Kelso in supporting | roles. B | ! i Dachshund a Hunting Dog. | The dachshund is a true hound and | s used for hunting in Europe, espe- | cially for getting foxes and other such aninls out of holes, us it is n great | digger, and s peculior build enables | it to go down a relatively small holm‘ It has ar excellent niose, and will trail rabbits, foxes and otber game with grent tenacity. but it18 Uttle 'used for hunting in this country hecause it 18 hard to train and manage, paying little attention to orders, and dolng as it pleases. If the game goes {o earth, it Is almost impossible to get the duchs- hund away until it has been dug out. This breed is of great antiquity, one of its kind Leing painted on an Bgyp- tian monument of 2000 B. C. Orang-Outang Misnamed. ! Occasionully the underbrush (south- eastern Borneo) crashed beneath the | tread of some heavy animal—n rthi- | noceros perhaps or possibly an orang: | utan. L might add, parenthetically, that orang-utan means,’ in the Malay language, “hian of the forest,” while orang-outang, the name which we care- lessly apply to the great anthropoid, | means “man in debt."—E. Alexander | T'owell in Scribner's Magazine. | Truly Feminine Enjoyment. | Florence is n grert reader.. One day | she was reading a sad story, .and was | <obbing as if her heart would break. | Her sister noticed it, and asked her | why she was crying. Turning to her | fmpatiently Florence sobbed, “Can't vou leave me nlone when I'm enjoy- ' ing myrelf?" —_— i IS ENJOYING HIS FIRST Minnesota Man’s Troubles Dis- appear After Taking Tanlac and He Now Feels Fine— Suffered Five Years. “I am now enjoying good health for the first time in years and I owe it all to Tanlac,” said Emil Gilbert- son of Cottonwood, Minn. . “For nearly five years I was a suf- ferer from nervous indigestion. Af- ter meals I bloated up terribly with gas that pressed around my heart and hurt so I could hardly stand it. At night I was so nervous and racked with pain and so choked up I couldn't GCOD HEALTH IN YEARS sleep. My kidneys bothered me con- stantly and I was so weak and run- down it was hard for me to do.my! work. . “But all these troubles are things of the past now, for ' Tanlac has 'brought my appetite back, got my jstomach and Lidneys in fine condition and built me up in every way, and, yin fact, has made a clean sweep of all my ailments. I just feel fine all the time now, and can do as good a day’s work as anybody. People are foolish to suffer when they can get Tanlac.”! | Tanlac is sold in Bemidji by City' {Drug Store, Knutson & Lilja at | Graceton, V. M. Owen & Co. at {Hines, James Taylor, Tenstrike, and by the leading druggists in every town —Advertisement. { By Booth Tarkington, Arthur Somers. Roche, Louis Joseph Vance, Corra Harris, Joseph C. Lincoln, Kathleen Norris, Samuel Hopkins Adams 25 cents the copy $3.00 the year Cosmopolitan America’s Greatest Magazine enerous portions of three short starles, and four articl hundred es . . . over om usand words of editorial matter. y is truly ten hours of enjoyment ‘Cosmonolitsn_is as good as a X k. and you get twelve issucs for less than the cost of two good ) Compate the current issue, article by articl story by story, with any other magazine an you won't hesitate a minute about including Cosmopolitan in your list for the coming year. 35 centa the copy $4.00 the year. ) Hedr'st’s ‘The One Indispensable Mnmmy Hearst's is edited with the purpose of making i id. In each Issue e, e Wotks of the Worls Famous Writers—the Thoughts of the World Phincasmthe Words of the World ers Evaryi:nm in Hearst’s is illustrated by the ont famoug artists. i Teatat's contains as much fiction In each issue as any other fiction magazinc, and as much sefious {iterature as the average magazine of comment of teview—really two magasines In one, s is to it questiona of home, 35 cents the copy Good Housckeeping The Homemaker’s Authority Good Housekeeping serves every activity and interest of the typical American woman. Good Housekeeplng hi » 1 with Fashions, rtments _that deal :f-’h'inlm::d‘ Decorations, Child Welfare, Health and Beauty, Entertainment, Colored Cutouts for tbe“CMIl{‘Irn.‘ Ncedhwqu.:\;:;lm ataa Good Housekeeping occupies be filled b nupnt er periodical. Be sure to include it rn your list. 28 cents the copy $3.00 the year Harper’s Bazar The Fashion Authority of the World The features that gave Harper's Bazar its success gver fity years g0 are retained, enlarged and mproved. v Harper's Bazar_publishes in each issue more fashlons and better faghions thau any magazine in America. The saving made by helping you not to purchase a, single ifl-chosen gown wil pay for several years' subscription. It is an ideal magazine for women of culture and refinement. 50 centa the copy $6.00 the year Motor ‘The National Magazine of Motoring The editorial; mattcr .in_motor is for the indi- vidual - motorist—the _owner—the man who deives the car. % A Wide awake antomobile deal=r, garage owner or accessory. dealer will make ‘nse of Motor because of its studied consumer interest. He will be able to use tiié paxes of Motor, both ves, 8 far s possible, the great family, busincssand private life. $4.00 the year wants of his tustomers. » Motor illustrations liven and clarify the text. * Repair articles are fully illustrated. 58 cents the copy Motor Boating The National Magazine of Motor Boating MoToR BoaTinG is a gnide and companion to the boating enthusiast. it i and charts; new boat articles on mavigation, customs of the water; and tells not onl ‘ motor ailments, but better still, 25 cents the copy readera a liberal education. Tt editorial and advertising, to keep ahead of the’ $6.00 the year” -Offer No. 5 " PIONEER ... " Cosmops n . {' Good Housckeeping. 00} $4.00 1 Year.... $3. $7.65: - ‘ You Save $4.35 vofier No. 6 All for PIONEER Yesr.... 500 Hearats Your . u.oo} $7.65 Good Housekeeping..1 Year.... $3.00) You.Save $4.35 All for $8.90 Year.34.00 J You Sava $4.10 Offer No. 7 PIONEER Cosmopoli Hearst's All for ]. $9.40 You Save $4.60 Offer No. 8 PIONEER Good Housekeeping. Harper’s Bazar.........1 All for $9.40 You Save $4.60 Offer No.'9® PIONEER All for Bl $1040 You Save .$4.60 Offer No. 10 PIONEER .. Hearst's Motor ... I ————— Offer No. 11 i 'Ale for PIONEER £l $1040 lc-l:'-rp:lg:llnrnr. | You Save $4.60 All for 3800) $10.40 -$6.00 | You Save $4.60 Offer No. 12 " BEMID)I 'DRILY; PIONEER BEMIDJI; MINN. it : Date. Enclosed find $.. Send your paper and the magazines by mail (By Carrier 75 cents extra) = Be Sure You | MAIL THIS | Name ... Street or R. F. D. .. SPECIAL ORDER BLANK Town.....

Other pages from this issue: